On my last long run, which was an 18-miler, I carried one 24 oz. bottle of diluted Gatorade and one PowerBar Gel.

Frankly, this probably wasn’t enough. I ran out of Gatorade too early, and another Gel might have helped.

Wouldn’t it be nice if you could know exactly how to re-fuel during endurance training and competition to ensure your body had everything it needs to perform at its best?

The good news is that you can know, and the next few posts are going to deal with this issue.

The reason why re-fueling is necessary during endurance training and competition is that you lose things (water, sodium, carbohydrate calories, protein) that need to be replenished, and you gain things (lactate acid) that need to be disposed of or need help processing.

So as you can see, the body is not capable of absorbing and utilizing new fuel at the same rate that it uses it.

Replenishing Carbohydrate Calories

Let’s take carbohydrate caloriesfor example.

Let’s say you discover that you lose 700-900 an hour, and decide you are going to take in 700-900 carb calories an hour to "replace" them. For most athletes, the calorie oxidation rate and gastric absorption rate typically allow for no more than 300 calories to be absorbed and converted into fuel each hour.

Translation: expect some serious stomach problems trying to consume 700 to 900 carb calories per hour with the "replacement" idea.

Replenishing Water

Another example would be water. It is commonly said, "Drink as much water as you can, and every chance you get."

Failure to rehydrate poses a substantial problem during endurance events, particularly with hot and humid conditions. However, fluid replacement requirements have been emphasized to the point of overcompensation, particularly drinking excessive amounts of water.

The problem arises when your total activity level exceeds 3 hours, and fluids have been solely replaced with plain water. Bottom line: you must replenish salt along with water.

Proper Triathlete Refueling Strategies

Fluids, calories and electrolytes cannot be replaced 100% or even 50%. Attempting to do so may cause cramping, vomiting, gastric distress, diarrhea and other problems.

As a rule of thumb, you can replenish about one-third of what you lose. Don’t let this fact discourage you. The human body knows you can’t fully replace what it looses tit for tat, and the mind and body has ways of compensating, enduring and dealing with it.

The focus is not replacing what you use up, but replenishing what your body can assimilate and utilize. Therefore, the proper re-fueling goal we are trying to achieve is NOT to replace what you lose, but to replenish what you can use.

There are a lot of endurance-specific fueling products on the market from various sports nutrition companies such as Hammer, Cytosport, and Accelerade.

Before our next post on this same topic, here are a couple articles worth reading to begin familiarizing yourself with the options:

It wasn’t too long ago that I was exploring the idea of doing my first Triathlon. If I can do it, you can too! I’m over 40 years old, but I don’t give up easily. Lately, I’ve been focusing on ultra endurance competitions such as 50+-mile running. I’m proof that with a little determination and training, you can get a great deal of fulfillment participating in marathons, triathlons, even ultramarathons.

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